For my fellow David Bowie aficionados out there, I am selling a rare piece of Bowie memorabilia on eBay this week: his costume designer, May Routh's, original script to THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH, featuring her hand-written notes about his costumes for the film (which would later appear on the cover of the LOW and STATION TO STATION albums). It's also a beautifully-written screenplay (by Paul Mayersberg, who also wrote MERRY CHRISTMAS, MR. LAWRENCE with Bowie and CROUPIER, among other films).
Here's a link to the auction:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/David-Bowies-costumers-original-script-THE-MAN-WHO-FELL-TO-EARTH-Nicolas-Roeg-/221182912028?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item337f87661c
Monday, January 28, 2013
Friday, January 11, 2013
R.I.P. actor Jon Finch
Actor Jon Finch has died with almost no fanfare-- the only immediately available obituary was in the local newspaper in the English town where spent his last years. He
has always been a favorite of mine-- brooding, irate, Byronic-- like
Klaus Kinski, the kind of actor that you loved to watch but would have PAID to
not to have to work with. Finch did a beautiful job as
Roman Polanski's MACBETH, and delivered his signature performance in Hitchcock's last truly great
film, FRENZY, as mean, drunken, self-destructive Dick Blaney. Finch really
soared as an actor in Robert Fuest's THE FINAL PROGRAMME. If anyone ever
chooses to film Michael Moorcock's berserk Jerry Cornelius novels
again, they will be hard-pressed to find an actor who could fall so utterly perfectly into the role of J.C.
Finch was eerily perfect as the surly, bitter, spitting
cobra Dick Blaney in Hitchcock's phenomenal FRENZY. He's a perfect foil
for the film's villain, the (superficially) amiable Bob Rusk (played by the late
Barry Foster). Blaney is the kind of character who calls nearly everybody "a
bastard"- women included- which helps make FRENZY one of the best "bad mood movies" that I know of.
Ironically, just days before I heard about Finch's passing, I was quoting one of his lines from THE FINAL PROGRAMME in an essay: "Well, for a start, I'm going to sit here and get smashed out of my mind. And I also have it on very good authority that the world is coming to an end. I thought I'd go home and watch it on television."
R.I.P.
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